Tragic tale of two West Bank teenagers freed in Gaza truce

Tragic tale of two West Bank teenagers freed in Gaza truce
he family of Wael Masha, 18, killed in an Israeli airstrike on the Balata camp. (AFP)
Short Url
Updated 25 September 2024
Follow

Tragic tale of two West Bank teenagers freed in Gaza truce

Tragic tale of two West Bank teenagers freed in Gaza truce

BALATA: Newly freed from an Israeli prison, Wael Masha rode atop friends’ shoulders through the streets of his West Bank refugee camp before bursting into his home to kiss his mother’s feet.
Less than a year later, those friends carried the 18-year-old’s body through the same streets after Israeli forces killed him in an air strike, describing him as an armed militant who posed a threat to Israeli forces.
His journey was not unique: Masha is one of at least three Palestinians born in the Israeli-occupied West Bank who were arrested as teenagers, released during a brief truce in the Gaza war last November, then killed in intensifying Israeli military operations in the territory.
Israel says its raids and air strikes in the West Bank, which it has occupied since 1967, reflect the scope of the security threat it faces from Palestinian combatants.
His family and others like them say Israel is fueling the problem it claims to be fighting, arresting young men — Masha was 17 when he was taken into custody — then abusing them in custody, ultimately driving them to seek revenge.
What is not in dispute is that Masha embraced “jihad” after his release, and knew where it would lead.
In his will, he instructed his mother: “When you hear the news of my martyrdom, God willing, do not cry, but ululate.”
While some memorial posters show Masha brandishing an automatic weapon, his mother remembers him differently.
“He loved studying and repairing computers and mobile phones,” Hanadi Masha told AFP in the family home in Balata refugee camp, east of Nablus, surrounded by pictures of her smiling son.
Perhaps this interest could have turned into a career, she added.
But “after he got out of prison, he had a grudge because of everything he saw inside.”
The fallout from the nearly year-old war in Gaza has reverberated across the West Bank, where the health ministry says at least 680 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli forces and settlers since Hamas’s October 7 attack.
Israeli officials say 24 Israelis, including troops, have been killed in Palestinian attacks during the same period.
Even before the war, Israeli round-ups of Palestinian men were common, including the one in November 2022 in which Masha was detained.
The Palestinian Prisoners’ Club advocacy group says there are at least 250 Palestinians under the age of 18 currently in Israeli custody.
“The occupation does not hesitate to arrest children under 18 years old... The widespread arrests have nothing to do with any armed action,” said Hilmi Al-Araj of the Palestinian civil society group Hurryyat.
Israeli authorities took Masha to Megiddo prison in northern Israel and sentenced him to two and a half years on charges they never disclosed to his family.
His surprise release came during a weeklong truce in Gaza in November 2023, the only one of the war so far, during which Palestinian militants released 105 hostages seized on October 7, the Israelis among them in exchange for 240 Palestinians held in Israeli jails.
Once out, Masha recounted a host of abuses: being instructed to kiss the Israeli flag, being burned with cigarette butts.
His father Bilal said the experience was “a huge shock” that “changed things completely” for him.
“My son entered as a cub and came out as a lion,” he said.
Israel has not explained the precise circumstances of Masha’s death, and his parents say they do not know what he was doing when an Israeli strike killed him on August 15.
They only know that the day before the strike Masha said he received a threatening phone call from an Israeli officer warning: “It’s your turn.”
The details are clearer for Tariq Daoud, a second Palestinian teenager who was detained with Masha and released on the same day of the November truce.
Like Masha, Daoud said he was beaten at Megiddo prison, his brother Khaled told AFP at the family home in Qalqilyah, where children wear necklaces featuring his face.
Khaled said the abuse produced false confessions from Tariq — aged 16 when he was arrested — on charges including possessing an illegal firearm and attempting to build explosives.
Incarceration “shattered all his ambitions,” which had included potentially becoming an engineer or a doctor, Khaled said.
Instead he joined Hamas’s armed wing.
In the same week that Masha was killed, Tariq opened fire on an Israeli settler in Azzun, east of Qalqilyah, and Israeli troops shot him dead at the scene, both Khaled and the Israeli military said.
Israeli officials have not yet released his body, but Khaled still visits his plot at the Qalqilyah cemetery every day to water the flowers.
“I go because I feel that there is something of his presence,” Khaled said.
Back in the Balata camp, Masha’s mother Hanadi has found her own ways to honor her son, talking about him with his four younger siblings and stroking pictures of his beard — just like she playfully greeted him when he was alive.
Shortly after Masha’s death, the institute where he had been taking classes told her he had been awarded certificates in mobile phone repair and cybersecurity.
His mother attended the graduation ceremony on his behalf.
“He was a young man in the prime of life,” she told AFP through tears.
His time behind bars “planted the idea of resistance in his head.”


Moroccan PM calls for ‘pragmatic, realistic multilateralism’ to serve Africa’s needs

Moroccan PM calls for ‘pragmatic, realistic multilateralism’ to serve Africa’s needs
Updated 8 sec ago
Follow

Moroccan PM calls for ‘pragmatic, realistic multilateralism’ to serve Africa’s needs

Moroccan PM calls for ‘pragmatic, realistic multilateralism’ to serve Africa’s needs
  • Aziz Akhannouch: African countries ‘very minor contributors’ to climate change but ‘most affected’
  • Accuses Israel of ‘blatant violation of international law and of all human values’

NEW YORK CITY: Moroccan Prime Minister Aziz Akhannouch asserted the need for multilateralism in today’s evolving landscape at the 79th UN General Assembly on Tuesday.

The “diplomatic doctrine of the Kingdom of Morocco is multilateral at its core,” but “we can’t content ourselves with merely declaring good intentions,” he said.

“We need new momentum. We need new reform to which all segments, all strata of society, including women and young people, can contribute.”

Akhannouch stressed the effects of climate challenge, particularly on African countries, which are “very minor contributors to pollution which causes climate change” and yet are “most affected by the results and the consequences of climate change.”

As a solution to this problem, which is exacerbated by debt crises, he called for the creation of innovative financing mechanisms and reform of the international financial system that would help developing countries achieve financing to aid economic recovery.

This is why, he said, “Morocco calls for pragmatic, realistic multilateralism to serve the needs of the African continent.”

The country is applying this approach to various areas such as climate change, terrorism and social justice, Akhannouch added.

He highlighted Morocco’s efforts in the region, such as the initiative launched last year to enable countries in the Sahel region to have access to the Atlantic Ocean, and its autonomy plan for Western Sahara.

Akhannouch expressed Morocco’s “extreme concern” at the Israel-Palestinian conflict, calling the aggression against Palestinians a “blatant violation of international law and of all human values. The stability of the region is linked with the two-state solution.”

He stated Morocco’s solidarity with Lebanon and said it respects the country’s “sovereignty and territorial integrity.”

Amid the many global challenges facing the world, Akhannouch urged the UNGA to rethink the way it works and appeal to “our collective conscience,” adding: “We need to rethink our fundamental values, but we need to return to our fundamental values.”

He said the UN has a “collective responsibility,” which should encourage its members to “return to our values of humanity — the humanity that underpinned the very inception of this organization. Thus, reform is needed as we approach the 80th anniversary of the creation of our organization.”


Norway starts probe into reported links to exploding pagers in Lebanon

Norway starts probe into reported links to exploding pagers in Lebanon
Updated 15 min 43 sec ago
Follow

Norway starts probe into reported links to exploding pagers in Lebanon

Norway starts probe into reported links to exploding pagers in Lebanon
  • Norway security agency launches preliminary investigation
  • Bulgaria is investigating a company founded by a Norwegian
  • Rinson Jose founded Norta Global Ltd. in 2022, registry shows

OSLO: Norway’s security police (PST) have begun a preliminary investigation into reports that a Norwegian-owned company was linked to the sale of pagers to Lebanese militant group Hezbollah that exploded last week, a police lawyer told Reuters.
Over a two-day period last week, thousands of pagers, as well as walkie-talkies used by Hezbollah operatives, blew up in Lebanon, killing at least 39 people and wounding thousands. The attacks were widely believed to have been carried out by Israel, which has neither confirmed nor denied its involvement.
It is not clear how and when the pagers were weaponized so they could be remotely detonated. Taiwan, Hungary and Bulgaria are already investigating possible links in the supply chain.
“PST has initiated a preliminary investigation to determine whether there are reasons for starting a (full) investigation on the basis of allegations in the media that a Norwegian-owned company may have been involved in the dissemination of pagers to Hezbollah,” PST lawyer Haris Hrenovica said in a text message to Reuters.
Earlier he told Norwegian news agency NTB that the police had no specific suspicions at this time.
Bulgarian authorities said last week they were investigating Sofia-based company Norta Global Ltd. after a Hungarian media report that it was involved in facilitating the sale of the pagers.
The company was founded in 2022 by Norwegian citizen, Rinson Jose, 39, according to Bulgaria’s corporate registry. He signed the company’s articles of association at the Bulgarian consulate in Oslo, the documents reviewed by Reuters showed.
Jose declined to comment on the pagers when reached by phone last Wednesday and hung up when asked about the Bulgarian business. He did not return repeated calls and text messages.
When Reuters tried to call him on Tuesday this week, the call was directed to an answering service.
Jose’s Linkedin profile shows he has been employed by DN Media Group since February 2020. DN Media Group said he worked in the sales department and that he left for a conference in Boston on Sept. 17.
He last contacted his colleagues by email on Sept. 18, according to Norwegian media. His employer told Reuters it had not been able to reach him since.
Reuters has found no evidence linking Norta Global to the DN Media Group.


Israel ‘pushing region toward all-out war’: Egypt, Iraq, Jordan

Israel ‘pushing region toward all-out war’: Egypt, Iraq, Jordan
Updated 25 September 2024
Follow

Israel ‘pushing region toward all-out war’: Egypt, Iraq, Jordan

Israel ‘pushing region toward all-out war’: Egypt, Iraq, Jordan

BAGHDAD: The foreign ministers of Egypt, Iraq and Jordan condemned Israel’s “aggression” against Lebanon Wednesday, warning that it is “pushing the region toward all-out war.”
The ministers said that stopping the “dangerous escalation under way in the region... begins by halting Israel’s aggression in Gaza,” in a joint statement issued after a meeting on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.


Four UAE soldiers killed, 9 injured on duty

Four UAE soldiers killed, 9 injured on duty
Updated 25 September 2024
Follow

Four UAE soldiers killed, 9 injured on duty

Four UAE soldiers killed, 9 injured on duty
  • The soldiers died in “an accident while carrying out their duty in the country”

ABU DHABI: Four soldiers from the UAE Armed Forces were killed and nine others were injured in “an accident”, the country’s ministry of defense said Wednesday.  
The military statement, posted on the state news agency WAM, said the soldiers died in “an accident while carrying out their duty in the country” without mentioning further details.  
The injured were receiving the necessary medical care, the statement read.


Driven out of Iran, Afghan refugees tell of ordeal

Driven out of Iran, Afghan refugees tell of ordeal
Updated 25 September 2024
Follow

Driven out of Iran, Afghan refugees tell of ordeal

Driven out of Iran, Afghan refugees tell of ordeal
  • Many entered Iran illegally or let their visas expire. Nearly 90 percent have been deported, with the rest returning voluntarily
  • These refugees in counterfeit Fendi or Dior T-shirts are registered by the Afghan authorities and examined by the International Organization for Migration (IOM)

ISLAM QALA: At the border with Iran, streams of Afghan refugees return with children in their arms, their entire worldly possessions contained in a large bag.
Every day up to 3,000 Afghans — some who were born in Iran — arrive back in their home country after a failed attempt at a better life.
“Refugees face a lot of physical and mental torture,” Abdul Ghani Qazizada, responsible for registering the arrivals in the border town of Islam Qala, told AFP.
Many entered Iran illegally or let their visas expire. Nearly 90 percent have been deported, with the rest returning voluntarily.
The rate of expulsions has increased “in the last six months,” said Qazizada.
“They are warned there (in Iran) that they must leave within one week, or anyone above 18 must deposit 100 million toman ($2,375) in the bank,” he said.
“These are the people who return to Afghanistan voluntarily because of this problem.”
These refugees in counterfeit Fendi or Dior T-shirts are registered by the Afghan authorities and examined by the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
To rebuild their lives, they are given 2,000 Afghanis ($29) per person if they arrive with their family, but nothing if they are alone.
Ramazan Azizi, 36, waits, haggard, on a blue plastic chair to be registered with his wife and three children.
They entered Iran illegally in 2023, after paying $1,220 to a trafficker but have faced growing hostility toward Afghans, accused of increasing unemployment and prices but also crime in a country under international sanctions.
“The owners had to pay a fine because they rented their home to us. They threw our things out of the windows,” Azizi, a construction worker, told AFP.
“They (authorities) told us to pack up and we did, we were taken to a military camp to be deported.”
He said the family were crammed in with 2,000 to 3,000 other Afghans for six days.
“We were exhausted... without food or water,” he said, his little girl wearing a pink T-shirt with rabbits on it sat by his side.
Tears flow from Fazila Qaderi, 26, as she recounts the ordeal she and her husband endured in the Karaj camp near the capital Tehran.
The guards “beat us a lot for six or seven days with metal batons,” making no distinction between men or women.
“I saw an Afghan die, and they shouted at him ‘son of a bitch, go home!’,” she said, adding that her husband suffered broken bones.
“Yesterday I told (the guards): ‘kill me or send us back to Afghanistan’.”
They arrived in Iran four years ago, having paid a smuggler, as farm workers in the central-northern province of Qazvin.
Their new life had started well, until she was hospitalized for 12 days for a severe allergy and needed an operation.
“We gave $1,200 to the doctor for the surgery and they said they would do it the next day. When we went back, the security officials took us,” she explained.
“We had a three-room apartment full of belongings, we couldn’t take a single thing with us,” she continues. “We had paid 50 million toman to the owner in advance, we couldn’t take that back either,” nor the advance to the doctor.
Now they have no money to pay for the trip back to their home province of Takhar in northeastern Afghanistan.


Day laborer Abdul Basir, 29, said he was arrested at work and expelled from Iran, despite having a valid passport and visa.
“With a passport I ended up in the military camp (in Karaj) for 10 days,” he said. “What government can do that?“
With his hands and feet tied, he was taken away in a bus with 70 to 80 people standing, and once at the camp he was beaten to the point he couldn’t move.
He describes “broken hands and feet, people fainting, maybe even dead” and thirst and hunger.
“There were elderly Afghans, women and children,” he says, adding that people were taken away and not seen again.
He also claimed that security personnel tore up Afghan passports or valid Iranian residence permits.
He was deported back to Afghanistan without his Afghan passport, which he paid $340 for so he could flee unemployment in Herat province.
“Now, I don’t have any money to pay for the bus to go home,” he said.
The Afghan official at the border, Qazizada, said around 70 percent of the refugees were sent back without Iranian documents.
Afghan Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi asked Tehran on Thursday to “cooperate patiently with Afghan refugees, who have also contributed to the development of Iran.”
In his first press conference earlier in the week, Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said Tehran was repatriating illegal nationals to their country “in a respectful manner.”
Iran has been a host country for 4.5 million Afghans fleeing decades of war and unemployment.
Iran’s spokesman for the parliamentary National Security Committee, Ebrahim Rezaei, earlier this month said police plan to “expel more than two million illegal citizens in the near future.”
Afghans represent more than 90 percent of foreign nationals and most enter without identity papers, according to the official IRNA news agency.
More than 700,000 undocumented Afghans have also left neighboring Pakistan following a crackdown which started in September last year.
In Iranian bakeries, signs prohibit the sale of bread to non-Iranians “under penalty of prosecution,” according to photos on social networks.
Fazila Qaderi confirms that she has not been able to buy bread for two months: “For them, an Afghan is worth less than a dog.”